| Bruce Sterling on Fri, 19 Nov 1999 18:27:23 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> Viridian Note 00110: Computers and Trees |
Key concepts: Natalie Jeremijenko, "Stump" program,
"OneTree" project, Bureau of Inverse Technology, tangible
cyberspace
Attention Conservation Notice: It's about techno-art.
Entries in the Viridian Solar Switchplate Contest:
http://www.powerbase-alpha.com/bigmike/switchplate.html
http://downlode.org/viridian/
http://custwww.xensei.com/users/stewarts/solar_electric.html
http://www.schultestorage.com/___SCHULTE_News/Viridian/viridian.html
http://humlog.homestead.com/viridianart/v_switch.html
http://hometown.aol.com/nuveeeeena/viridianproject.html
This contest ends very soon: November 20, 01999.
Link: http://www.looksmartradio.com
A recent Viridian interview with Bruce Sterling on grainy,
halting, herky-jerky net.radio.
Profiles: Natalie Jeremijenko
Link:
http://www.techreview.com/tr100/profile.php3?Jeremijenko
From: "MIT's Magazine of Innovation: Technology Review"
"Are you a knowledge worker? If so, Natalie
Jeremijenko would like you to install 'Stump' on your
computer. Every time you print out a tree's worth of
paper, Stump prints a picture of a tree ring. With enough
rings, you can reconstruct the stump of a tree.
"For Australian-born Jeremijenko, who is director of
the Yale University Engineering Design Lab and an
acclaimed technoartist, Stump is a way to make 'a tangible
version of the Internet world.' Jeremijenko says her aim
is to pierce the 'shared hallucination' that cyberspace is
somehow clean and immaterial.
"In reality, she points out, the digital domain is a
world of hardware and some hard truths. Jeremijenko makes
the latter difficult to ignore with projects like
'OneTree,' in which 2,000 walnut trees will be placed in
sensor-equipped planters around the San Francisco Bay area
next year. As the trees grow, their condition will record
the region's climatic, socioeconomic and environmental
extremes.(...)
"Jeremijenko, who produces much of her art under the
auspices of a fictional institution she calls the 'Bureau
of Inverse Technology,' makes novel use of technologies to
record social phenomena. She shot a documentary of Silicon
Valley from a remote-controlled spy plane, concealed
cameras in teddy bears to record children's expressions,
and installed a motion detector near the Golden Gate
Bridge to count suicides (17 in 100 days)."
(((I've said it before and I'll say it again:
Natalie Jeremijenko is the cat's pyjamas.)))
O=c=O O=c=O O=c=O O=c=O O=c=O O=c=O
I'M SUCKING COAL THROUGH ONE END
AND KILLING TREES WITH THE OTHER!
O=c=O O=c=O O=c=O O=c=O O=c=O O=c=O
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